Dave B Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 Hi all,I was down at the Deutscher Soldatenfriedhof at Cannock Chase yesterday and came across this grave.[attachmentid=26539]Does anyone know what the "I.M." stands for?CheersDave
Hendrik Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 Hi all,Does anyone know what the "I.M." stands for? Not sure at all but what about "In Memoriam" (in memory of) ... Do correct me if I'm wrong !
Dave B Posted February 7, 2006 Author Posted February 7, 2006 Not sure at all but what about "In Memoriam" (in memory of) ... Do correct me if I'm wrong !Hmm,not sure about that one.The grave above was the only one I could find with the "I.M." on.[attachmentid=26567]
Johnny Posted March 17, 2006 Posted March 17, 2006 I too have seen IM on German grave stones at La Cambe in France. It was only on an isolated few which would make me think its not 'In memory of....' Also from collecting death cards it would seem that the traditional 'In memorium' type phrase used in Germany is 'Gebets Andenken' which literally translated means Prayer memory.I would also be very keen to find out what it means!Johnny
Johnny Posted March 18, 2006 Posted March 18, 2006 In an effort to resolve this I've sent an email to the German war graves organisation asking if they can clarify. I'll update you as soon as i get a reply!!Johnny
Johnny Posted March 27, 2006 Posted March 27, 2006 I still haven't heard from the German War Graves. If I haven't heard anything in a few days I'll send off a chaser!!Johnny
J Temple-West Posted April 3, 2006 Posted April 3, 2006 I still haven't heard from the German War Graves. If I haven't heard anything in a few days I'll send off a chaser!!JohnnyThat's very good of you, Johnny. Keep us updated.
stephen Posted April 3, 2006 Posted April 3, 2006 (edited) HI,Just came upon this thread I have looked in the various dictionaries and asked the wife and we think it can only be In Memoriam.below are included all the abbreviations/abkuerzungen. we could come up with.acronym MeaningI.M. Ihre Majest?t i.M. im Massstab i.m. im memoriam IM Imperia Italian region and licence plate code IM Imst Austrian licence plate code IM Informeller MitarbeiterI.M. Innere Mission help organisation of the protestantic churchIM Internationaler Meister im. intramuskul?rDon't think it is definitive but the best I could come up with. I have excluded all the obviously modern ones. Edited April 3, 2006 by stephen
Johnny Posted April 3, 2006 Posted April 3, 2006 I still haven't heard from the German war graves. I have sent another email and this time I took the liberty of attaching the original picture to assist with making the point. (My German isn't the best even with the aid of a translation website.) I hope you don't mind Dave!!Having said all that 'In Memoriam' would appear to be hot favourite after seeing Stephens post.I shall update the thread as soon as I get the definitive answer from the 'horses mouth'.Johnny
Ed_Haynes Posted April 3, 2006 Posted April 3, 2006 Just a guess - Could this be a "memorial" (only) stone for situations where no remains are buried?Probably wrong.
Dave B Posted April 3, 2006 Author Posted April 3, 2006 I still haven't heard from the German war graves. I have sent another email and this time I took the liberty of attaching the original picture to assist with making the point. (My German isn't the best even with the aid of a translation website.) I hope you don't mind Dave!!Having said all that 'In Memoriam' would appear to be hot favourite after seeing Stephens post.I shall update the thread as soon as I get the definitive answer from the 'horses mouth'.JohnnyOf course I don't mind Johnny ...and many thanks for taking the time to find out what I.M. actually means! CheersDave
Richard Gordon Posted April 3, 2006 Posted April 3, 2006 Just a guess - Could this be a "memorial" (only) stone for situations where no remains are buried?Probably wrong.Ed, might be but I don't know. Based on the fact that I know of one HE-111 crew shot down over the south of England where 1 of the bodies was never recovered. No headstone was erected for this flier and he is listed on the German War graves site as having a 'sailors grave'. I would have thought if all the other crew are buried there then he would be also but this is not the case. Unless in somecases where the family requested a headstone be erected? Therefore the 'I.M.' ???Rich
Johnny Posted April 21, 2006 Posted April 21, 2006 Guys,I still haven't received any reply from the German war graves people so it doesn't look like I'm going to. My final hope is an email to a work colleague who is a fluent German speaker and is married to a German. He's ex military himself with an interest in similar matters so I'm hoping he may be able to help.Hope to have something constructive to add soon.Johnny
David Gregory Posted April 21, 2006 Posted April 21, 2006 Hi Guys,IM can still be seen used as an abbreviation for In Memoriam on ordinary German gravestones.Don't be surprised if it takes the Volksbund a long time to reply, if at all.David
Guest Rick Research Posted April 21, 2006 Posted April 21, 2006 I've been watching this one waiting for some final answer...in absence of same, two thoughts--the quoted "I.M.' might indicate a stone with no body...ORthat somebody has paid for "perpetual care" upkeep.Might be easiest to simply ask the CEMETERY if there is anybody BURIED under those stones.
Dave B Posted April 21, 2006 Author Posted April 21, 2006 Might be easiest to simply ask the CEMETERY if there is anybody BURIED under those stones.Good idea Rick,I'll nip down next week and see if I can find anything out.Dave
Johnny Posted May 9, 2006 Posted May 9, 2006 Hi guys,Finally I have the answer from German war graves. I must tip my hat to Stephen who initially said I M was In memorium. They have confirmed that that is the case. They said in there reply that these were the remains of air crew and no complete body had been found. Due to their inseperable condition they were buried together near the crash site at Hurn farm, Thorney, Peterborough and moved to Cannock Chase in 1979.Their unit is given as 4/N.J.G.2. I don't know much about the luftwaffe so if anybody can elaborate on the unit details I'd be very interested.CheersJohnny
Michael Johnson Posted May 9, 2006 Posted May 9, 2006 Hi guys,Finally I have the answer from German war graves. I must tip my hat to Stephen who initially said I M was In memorium. They have confirmed that that is the case. They said in there reply that these were the remains of air crew and no complete body had been found. Due to their inseperable condition they were buried together near the crash site at Hurn farm, Thorney, Peterborough and moved to Cannock Chase in 1979.Their unit is given as 4/N.J.G.2. I don't know much about the luftwaffe so if anybody can elaborate on the unit details I'd be very interested.CheersJohnnyIt's a nightfighter (nachtsjager) squadron, but can't say more than that.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now